BEIRUT (Reuters) - Lebanon’s central bank will start providing dollars for food imports as part of “necessary measures” to defend the battered local currency, whose slump has sent prices skyrocketing.

FILE PHOTO: Lebanon's Prime Minister Hassan Diab, wearing a mask, arrives to attend a meeting with Lebanese political leaders to present the plan aimed at steering the country out of a financial crisis, at the presidential palace in Baabda, Lebanon May 6, 2020. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir/File Photo

The Lebanese pound has lost more than half its value since October as the country sinks deep into a financial crisis on a scale it has never seen before.

Thursday’s central bank statement said its new measures would start next week and commercial banks could take part.

“I received a promise from the governor ... that the (central) bank will intervene in the market, starting from today, to protect the Lebanese pound and rein in the rise of the dollar exchange rate,” Prime Minister Hassan Diab said in a televised speech earlier.

He also said importing basic foodstuffs would be supported and prices monitored so that Lebanese would soon see a decline in costs.

In separate comments on Thursday, Diab warned the country risked a major food crisis and many Lebanese might soon find it hard to afford bread because of the situation and the fallout of COVID-19.

“Lebanon is facing a dramatic challenge that seemed unimaginable a decade ago: the risk of a major food crisis,” the premier wrote in a Washington Post op-ed.

Inflation, poverty and unemployment have soared. The prices of many consumer goods have doubled in the past six months.